size of battery needed for my solar panel

For the usage you describe, you would to better to keep a spare battery in your car, which the car can keep charged up, and carry it into the caravan on each trip.

If you had two batteries, you could leave one in the caravan. Your 120W panel might possibly prevent it going flat enough to die.

You need a deep-discharge battery, not a car starter battery. I bought one from BMS recently on special offer.
 
I have 3 motion detector cameras to run off of it. Though there will not be much motion detected where the caravan is going. I plan to have the cameras switch on when I am away and switched off when I am there
just a thought do you have the expected consumption figures for that set up in use ??
also do you have requirements for use and storage from third party items like hard drives and expected power consumption in connection to the cameras from the connected items at the caravan that need powered including internet requirements ??
 
You need a deep-discharge battery, not a car starter battery. I bought one from BMS recently on special offer.
Someone told me that they are all the same these days, the plates insider are the same thickness anyway
BMS?
 
just a thought do you have the expected consumption figures for that set up in use ??
also do you have requirements for use and storage from third party items like hard drives and expected power consumption in connection to the cameras from the connected items at the caravan that need powered including internet requirements ??
They are Tapo camera that have a memory card insert. The internet is a mobile wifi dongle type
 
The likes of the Rufford wind generator uses furlmatic design to bring it out of the wind when wind get too strong, so don't produce either with no or very high winds, they were used on the Falklands which is known for being windy, but to run an electric fence back in late 80's early 90's when I was there, the solar panel did a better job.

I do know the diesel heaters you are talking about, common in narrow boats, but in winter solar panel output is rather low, and you need some other method when the panels can't cope, be it a small generator, or taking the batteries somewhere to charge, that's up to you, but you need a back-up plan.

I would go to a narrow boat forum, they use generators, wind chargers and solar panels, both lead acid and lithium batteries, and can likely help better than on here. I have when using my e-bike gone to pubs and railway stations to recharge the batteries, there is normally somewhere you can take them.
 
You really need to be doing some research into it all. It isn't as simple as just connecting a panel to a battery. Have a look at the Facebook group:
Campervan Electrics

https://www.facebook.com/groups/3682684575132280

There is a mass of information there as well as some very knowledgeable persons you can ask for help.
Ask questions but I'd suggest not letting on that you want to cut corners or do it on the cheap (it can be expensive with lithium etc). Some of the guys tend to be very passionate about things. PS you don't necessarily need lithium but, you get what you pay for.
 
I do know the diesel heaters you are talking about, common in narrow boats, but in winter solar panel output is rather low, and you need some other method when the panels can't cope, be it a small generator, or taking the batteries somewhere to charge, that's up to you, but you need a back-up plan.

I use one, an 8Kw output, to provide heat to my workshop. Very effective, and efficient it is too. At first, I ran it on a 32amp/hour battery, itself connected to a 4amp/hour charger. I then decided to run it on an adapted PC PSU, risking a power outage, which would wreck the heater. These heaters have to be allowed to go through the proper cool down process, fan running, or the electronics will be wrecked by the heat. Running on just a battery, the power could likewise suddenly fail, and wreck the unit.
 
I started around 1965 looking at caravan electrics. At that time, all the battery did was work the water pump, replacing the rubber dome in the floor that I pressed with my foot, lighting was with gas, so was heating, the latter making the caravan very wet.

As times has gone on, we have moved from a 7 pin plug and socket to either a pair of plugs and sockets, or a 13 pin version, we have seen the blocking diode come and go, the split charge relay come and go, the charge inverter is now how we move the power from car to caravan, and we have seen tungsten then fluorescent then LED lights, the carver water and central heating unit which can use 12 or 230 volts, use gas or electric for the heating, and now the move to lithium batteries.

Solar panels have gone from simple zenor diode to MPPT controllers, and the homemade wind charger from a converted bicycle hub dynamo has moved to the Rutford units. We have seen the Wispergen and the like external combustion engine to allow generators to run 24/7 without waking the neighbours, and the more basic inverter generators which can drop to tick over with low load.

What as the user, we need to consider is running cost v installation cost v noise, and how far to go, and we can't do that without knowing the whole story, we can only put forward ideas.

In the 70's we went for the battery in a bread bin, in the boot of the car. Lucas made a unit designed to do it, but some tie down straps in the boot, and split charging allowed us to swap batteries every few days, so the battery was charged every time the car was used, not just when towing the caravan. These old simple ideas went out with the stop/start system used in modern cars, we can't connect relays and blocking diodes like in the old days any more. In fact, it caused danger, when the car stopped charging and the anti-snake device was disabled, so today we use charge inverters, and mobus systems which I have not kept up with.

But in general, the size of solar panels and wind generators required to live off grid are far too big, so somewhere, somehow, we need to supplement the power by taking batteries to be charged, or running a petrol generator, or plugging into some other power supply, and a caravan in the main weight matters, a narrow boat can have a bank of lead acid batteries 120 amp hour each, and once a month plug into a shore supply, with a caravan they would be far too heavy. So the portable power bank is more useable with caravans.

So we start with working out what we need, be it a tent, boat, caravan or house, we look at items used, an easy way is simple measure it, I have a smart meter, and solar software, both tell me how much I am using, I use around 12 kWh per day of electric, so armed with that figure I can start to work out what I need. There are the odd items, in my case the electric shower, which my inverter could never supply, so I know I can never run without mains input, and I also know solar production is eristic, 1765538155503.png so the battery size to even out the supply would be huge, so I don't even try, I know some days I need to buy power.

So if I was living off grid, I would need either power from a stream or river, or an engine of some sorts, to bridge the gap, with are returning to the industrial revolution where the mill owners realised even water power could fail in a dry summer, and moving to a steam engine removed this problem, nothing has changed, we can't store enough power to bridge the lean times, the large batteries in the UK like electric mountain (Dinorwig Power Station in Snowdonia, Wales) were designed to work with other power stations, not on their own, so you're looking at a package, rather than just solar, or just wind.

So the big question is voltage. 12, 24, 56, 230, AC or DC, what ever you have likely you will need something to convert one voltage to another, but what is the base voltage going to be? I have a large 5 kW inverter to change between 56 volts and 230 volts, and a much smaller one 300 watt and 150 watt to convert 12 volts to 230 volts, I have nothing which can use 56 volts direct, but loads which can use 12 volts direct, so I can have a 12 volt battery directly power lights, no inverter involved. With the modern lithium battery pack, it needs an inverter running to convert from around 50 volts to 12 volts or 5 volts if using USB.

In the caravan even a simple bulb has an inverter built in, caravan LED bulbs typical 10 - 30 volts, the only way to get that range is an inverter built into the bulb. But changing voltage uses energy, so it's a balance, and you need to consider all the factors, and decide what will suit you best.
 
The OP, is starting from the wrong end, and not bothering to involve an maths....

He should start by working out how many watt/hours he needs, for each item he plans to use, then decide how he can source that daily amount, reliably. Instead, he is suggesting what he has in mind as his source, then asking will it do.
 
I started around 1965 looking at caravan electrics. At that time, all the battery did was work the water pump, replacing the rubber dome in the floor that I pressed with my foot, lighting was with gas, so was heating, the latter making the caravan very wet.

As times has gone on, we have moved from a 7 pin plug and socket to either a pair of plugs and sockets, or a 13 pin version, we have seen the blocking diode come and go, the split charge relay come and go, the charge inverter is now how we move the power from car to caravan, and we have seen tungsten then fluorescent then LED lights, the carver water and central heating unit which can use 12 or 230 volts, use gas or electric for the heating, and now the move to lithium batteries.

Solar panels have gone from simple zenor diode to MPPT controllers, and the homemade wind charger from a converted bicycle hub dynamo has moved to the Rutford units. We have seen the Wispergen and the like external combustion engine to allow generators to run 24/7 without waking the neighbours, and the more basic inverter generators which can drop to tick over with low load.

What as the user, we need to consider is running cost v installation cost v noise, and how far to go, and we can't do that without knowing the whole story, we can only put forward ideas.

In the 70's we went for the battery in a bread bin, in the boot of the car. Lucas made a unit designed to do it, but some tie down straps in the boot, and split charging allowed us to swap batteries every few days, so the battery was charged every time the car was used, not just when towing the caravan. These old simple ideas went out with the stop/start system used in modern cars, we can't connect relays and blocking diodes like in the old days any more. In fact, it caused danger, when the car stopped charging and the anti-snake device was disabled, so today we use charge inverters, and mobus systems which I have not kept up with.

But in general, the size of solar panels and wind generators required to live off grid are far too big, so somewhere, somehow, we need to supplement the power by taking batteries to be charged, or running a petrol generator, or plugging into some other power supply, and a caravan in the main weight matters, a narrow boat can have a bank of lead acid batteries 120 amp hour each, and once a month plug into a shore supply, with a caravan they would be far too heavy. So the portable power bank is more useable with caravans.

So we start with working out what we need, be it a tent, boat, caravan or house, we look at items used, an easy way is simple measure it, I have a smart meter, and solar software, both tell me how much I am using, I use around 12 kWh per day of electric, so armed with that figure I can start to work out what I need. There are the odd items, in my case the electric shower, which my inverter could never supply, so I know I can never run without mains input, and I also know solar production is eristic, View attachment 401981 so the battery size to even out the supply would be huge, so I don't even try, I know some days I need to buy power.

So if I was living off grid, I would need either power from a stream or river, or an engine of some sorts, to bridge the gap, with are returning to the industrial revolution where the mill owners realised even water power could fail in a dry summer, and moving to a steam engine removed this problem, nothing has changed, we can't store enough power to bridge the lean times, the large batteries in the UK like electric mountain (Dinorwig Power Station in Snowdonia, Wales) were designed to work with other power stations, not on their own, so you're looking at a package, rather than just solar, or just wind.

So the big question is voltage. 12, 24, 56, 230, AC or DC, what ever you have likely you will need something to convert one voltage to another, but what is the base voltage going to be? I have a large 5 kW inverter to change between 56 volts and 230 volts, and a much smaller one 300 watt and 150 watt to convert 12 volts to 230 volts, I have nothing which can use 56 volts direct, but loads which can use 12 volts direct, so I can have a 12 volt battery directly power lights, no inverter involved. With the modern lithium battery pack, it needs an inverter running to convert from around 50 volts to 12 volts or 5 volts if using USB.

In the caravan even a simple bulb has an inverter built in, caravan LED bulbs typical 10 - 30 volts, the only way to get that range is an inverter built into the bulb. But changing voltage uses energy, so it's a balance, and you need to consider all the factors, and decide what will suit you best.
Brilliant post!
Thank you.
 
The likes of the Rufford wind generator uses furlmatic design to bring it out of the wind when wind get too strong, so don't produce either with no or very high winds, they were used on the Falklands which is known for being windy, but to run an electric fence back in late 80's early 90's when I was there, the solar panel did a better job.
so best forget about that one then

I do know the diesel heaters you are talking about, common in narrow boats, but in winter solar panel output is rather low, and you need some other method when the panels can't cope, be it a small generator, or taking the batteries somewhere to charge, that's up to you, but you need a back-up plan.
To be honest Im not that bothered because if there is not enough battery to power it then i will just come back home
It was only for the odd night a week


I would go to a narrow boat forum, they use generators, wind chargers and solar panels, both lead acid and lithium batteries, and can likely help better than on here. I have when using my e-bike gone to pubs and railway stations to recharge the batteries, there is normally somewhere you can take them.
I was on a caravan forum before, but very little info. I am surprised with the lack of knowlage they had (on terms of group think) they could manage 1 night parked up in the frost. Either that or they payed some kind of rip off Halfords to do it all for them
 

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